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Canadian scientists appear to have proven that you can, in fact, run away from old age.

In what could stand up as the most powerful evidence yet that exercise prolongs life, a study by McMaster University researchers in Hamilton found that signs of premature aging were halted — and even reversed — in virtually every tissue and organ in the bodies of exercised mice.

The finding, which could be a turning point in anti-aging medicine, suggests the proverbial fountain of youth won't come from a pill or from an exotic berry from the Amazon, but rather plain old exercise.

Mice genetically altered to age faster were forced to run on treadmills for 45 minutes, three times a week.

Five months later, the mice looked as young, healthy and active as wild-type mice — mice that didn't have the genetic mutation — while their sedentary and same-aged siblings were balding, greying and shrinking.

While the exercised mice scampered and scurried about their cages, the aging non-runners huddled in a corner, barely moving.

Not only did the treadmill-running mice look as sleek-coated, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed as wild mice, but the researchers also saw "huge recovery" in age-related damage to practically every tissue they could analyze.

"What's neat about our study is that this is something that is conceivably so simple. We purposely exercised them three times a week for 45 minutes at a moderate-intensity exercise, which is something that any human — provided they don't have . . . (an illness) — can do."

What's more, the exercise did more than just protect the muscles and heart, as might have been expected.

The team found "unprecedented" anti-aging effects of endurance exercise on the brain, skin, hair, gonads (ovaries and testicles), kidneys, spleen and liver.

"Every part of the body was protected by exercise," said Tarnopolsky, a professor of pediatrics and medicine at McMaster's Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine. "I think that exercise is the most potent anti-aging therapy available today and likely forever."

Death is inevitable, "but exercise is the only way to stay healthy and free of disease for a longer period of time," he added.

"We know that exercise has benefits even when humans start over the age of 65. But this study clearly shows that we can get closer to the fountain of youth if we start when we're young and do moderate exercise our whole life."

The findings, published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, represents "one of the most striking rescues yet reported in aging models without gene therapy or a pharmaceutical intervention," said lead author Adeel Safdar, a senior PhD student working with Tarnopolsky.

At the crux of the experiments lies the mitochondrial hypothesis.

The mice were genetically manipulated to age twice as fast as normal because of a defect in the repair system of their mitochondria, the powerhouses or furnaces inside each cell that give our body energy.

Evidence has been mounting for decades that the older we get, the more mutations we accumulate in mitochondrial DNA. The furnaces start to break down, resulting in a steady decline in tissue and organ function, Safdar said.

That not only leads to aging, he said, but also to all the diseases associated with getting older, including cancer, Alzheimer's, diabetes and Parkinson's.

"And that's really the premise upon which these mice were created," Tarnopolsky said. "The people who created the mice essentially said, 'Why don't we create a mouse that has mitochondrial dysfunction and see if they age prematurely?' "

Lo and behold, the mice die about twice as fast as normal mice and show many features of human aging, he said, including hair loss, hearing loss, cataracts, brain atrophy or shrinkage, enlarged hearts and smaller muscles.

Epidemiological studies in humans have shown that people who are physically active or exercise regularly have fewer chronic diseases and tend to live longer — runners especially.

"So we thought this was a nice model that would allow us to really test how effective exercise really is in human aging," Tarnopolsky said.

The experiments began when the mice were three months old — about 20 in human years — and ended five months later when the mice were eight months old — in their late 60s by the human equivalent.

The mice were randomly assigned to running three times per week or to just being sedentary in their cages.

Five months later, the sedentary mice showed major signs of aging: Their ovaries and testes were small and their hearts were enlarged, compared to the running mice, whose hearts were essentially normal. "The brain was atrophic, or small in the non-runners, but it was back to normal size in the runners," Tarnopolsky added.

It's not clear exactly what's happening. But exercise is a physiological stressor — a good one — that causes the body to produce more energy.

Bigger studies involving more mice are needed to determine just how strong the life-extending effect of exercise might be.

But, said Tarnopolsky, the message is "it's never too late" to star exercising.

"I really think we have to start when people are young. We have to encourage our children and people throughout their life to maintain healthy levels of physical activity."

skirkey@postmedia.com

Twitter.com/sharon_kirkey

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